Leadership Skills for Small Business Leaders
The five most important Leadership skills for small business owners
Agenda
Introductions and Welcome
Small Businesses – Who Are They?
Leadership Skills for Sustainable Success
Leadership Skill Development
Call to Action!
Questions
Small Businesses Defined The Small Business Administration (SBA) defines a small business as independently owned and operated, organized for profit, and not dominant in its field. Examples include (www.sba.gov): Manufacturing: Maximum number of employees range from
500 to 1500, depending on the product manufactured
Services: Annual receipts may not exceed $2.5M to $21.5M, depending on the service being provided
Retailing: Annual receipts may not exceed $5.0M to $21.0M, depending on the particular product being provided
General and Heavy Construction: General construction annual receipts may not exceed $13.5M to $17M, depending on the type of construction
Leadership Skills
1. Effective Communications – defined as all parties understanding the message with the same meaning.
Same Meaning - Share knowledge (context) along with information (content).
Effective Listening – We are typically not hard of hearing, we are hard of listening.
Managing Conflict – Communications are both the cause and the cure for conflict.
Leadership Skills
2. Team Building – Teamwork is leveraging complementary skills toward shared goals and holding team members mutually accountable to achieving desired results.
Recruiting – Looking for future talent externally and re-recruiting your star performers internally
Hiring – Assessing attitude as well as skills and knowledge for all new hires at all levels.
Developing – Creating a culture for associates to stay relevant to your business.
Leadership Skills
3. Collaboration – How well do we work with:
Customers – How easy is it for them to do business with your organization?
Strategic Partners – How are these relationships generating mutual benefit to each other’s business?
Vendors – What core values do they each share with your business?
Employees – How does your culture leverage their active participation in your business?
Others?
Leadership Skills
4. Goal Setting/Time Management
Goal Setting – A process to clearly reflect priorities and expectations.
Written – not written; not real
Aligned – in sync with strategic direction
Shared – everyone knows what is expected
Time Management – …is really Goal Management
Prioritization – high rewards and/or consequences
Spending time versus investing time
Full calendar ≠ a plan
Leadership Skills
5. Business Acumen: Linking an insightful assessment of the external business landscape with the keen awareness of how money can be made – and then executing the strategy to deliver the desired results.
External Business Assessment – influences across the landscape impacting the ability to execute the strategy such as Political, Legal, Technology, Global and Sociocultural.
SWOT Analysis – Internal Strengths & Weaknesses along with external Opportunities and Threats.
Leadership Skill Development
Effective leadership development is as much about the questions as it is the answers. Ask the right questions to challenge the status quo.
What does business success look like?
How effective is the leader’s communication style?
What is the leader’s goal setting process?
How are leaders investing their time?
How do each of the associates attitudinally “fit” in the culture going forward?
Call to Action!
What will you do with this new information in the next 30 days to help you improve your leadership skills and more effectively lead your business?
Questions?
Thank You!
Rick Lochner
www.rpcleadershipassociates.com
630-219-3316